Louisville fell behind by 19 points in the first half and could never quite get all the way back, with North Carolina making timely threes and dominating the glass for a 93-76 win in the KFC Yum! Center.

Louisville fell behind by 19 points in the first half and could never quite get all the way back, with North Carolina making timely threes and dominating the glass for a 93-76 win in the KFC Yum! Center.

Judge Audra Eckerle made what is an extremely rare finding of prosecutorial misconduct, ruling that Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Jamhal Woolridge hid medical records that could have helped prove the innocence of a defendant.

Defense attorney Rob Eggert on Tuesday asked Eckerle to rule that Woolridge had committed misconduct and dismiss the case against Enrique Sandoval, who was accused of assaulting another man in a 2013 bar fight.

Eggert claimed Woolridge removed medical records that showed the alleged victim had a drinking problem, which would have been a key part of Sandoval's self-defense argument.

The records were only turned over this week, when the trial was set to begin, after Eggert said he told the prosecutor he believed some medical documents were missing.

Woolridge then turned over 38 pages of medical records that had been removed without explanation, Eggert told the judge, according to a video of the hearing.

The records show the alleged victim had previously been to the hospital because he had punched a glass door and fell down while intoxicated.

In a short hearing Tuesday, Woolridge argued that the medical records were from a separate incident and were not relevant to the current case.

Woolridge also said that dismissing the case was too extreme a punishment.

But the judge ruled it was clear the information should have been turned over and that she had twice ordered all medical records to be given to the defense.

“This information was altered by the commonwealth and deliberately not disclosed and concealed from the defense,” Eckerle said.

Assistant Commonwealth's Attorney Jeff Cooke, a spokesman for the office, said they disagreed with Eckerle's ruling and were looking at options on whether to try to push the case forward.

Cooke said "the fact that the judge rules against us doesn't change our position" that there was no misconduct and the older medical records were not relevant to the current case.

Most notably, the high-profile trial of accused murderer Dejuan Hammond fell apart in April 2014 after prosecutors failed to turn over key evidence -- a mistake Wine later admitted had been deliberate. A judge did not dismiss the case against Hammond and he was later convicted of murder.

Under state law, prosecutors are required to turn over any evidence that may be favorable to the defense. And the United States Supreme Court has ruled that hiding evidence favorable to the defense violates a defendant's constitutional right to due process.

Cooke said that while the office is reviewing the latest incident, Woolridge has not been disciplined as they believe he did nothing wrong.

As part of seeking evidence in Landan's defamation lawsuit against women who accused him of rape and sexual assault on Facebook, attorney Andrew Horne has filed requests for information from the initial accuser.

As part of seeking evidence in Landan's defamation lawsuit against women who accused him of rape and sexual assault on Facebook, attorney Andrew Horne has filed requests for information from the initial accuser.

“I think it’s unfortunate because in many cases the only way the public knows what’s going on in a criminal prosecution, which often ends up in a plea agreement or settlement, is the discovery filed in court,” said prominent First-Amendment attorney Jon Fleischaker, who represents WDRB. “This will add to the lack of information the public has about the criminal justice process.”

“I think it’s unfortunate because in many cases the only way the public knows what’s going on in a criminal prosecution, which often ends up in a plea agreement or settlement, is the discovery filed in court,” said prominent First-Amendment attorney Jon Fleischaker, who represents WDRB. “This will add to the lack of information the public has about the criminal justice process.”

On Monday, Judge Cunningham filed a notice of disqualification, potentially removing himself from the case because his impartiality "might reasonably be questioned." However, the judge ultimately left it up to prosecutors and defense attorneys to decide whether he should recuse. Both sides filed a response saying the attorneys had no objection to Cunningham presiding over the case.

On Monday, Judge Cunningham filed a notice of disqualification, potentially removing himself from the case because his impartiality "might reasonably be questioned." However, the judge ultimately left it up to prosecutors and defense attorneys to decide whether he should recuse. Both sides filed a response saying the attorneys had no objection to Cunningham presiding over the case.

The video allegedly shows staffers eating Gynnya’s food, leaving her lying in the same position for 10 hours without doing a close examination to see if she was Ok and failing to immediately provide CPR when they learned she was not breathing.

The video allegedly shows staffers eating Gynnya’s food, leaving her lying in the same position for 10 hours without doing a close examination to see if she was Ok and failing to immediately provide CPR when they learned she was not breathing.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Leroy Phillip Mitchell, known as Prince Phillip Mitchell, in U.S. District Court in Louisville this week, alleges both artists included "extensive sampling" of Mitchell's song in their work.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Leroy Phillip Mitchell, known as Prince Phillip Mitchell, in U.S. District Court in Louisville this week, alleges both artists included "extensive sampling" of Mitchell's song in their work.